THE NEW YORKER to pass away an hour; someone sug- gested Doyle's or Hoppe's, but they had found another place, a terrible place. . . . In the arena, clearly audible, Al Frazin announced on the loudspeaker that the referees would be Mallinson and O'Hara, and in the silence that followed Mallinson got a laugh with " D h h h "I " o you ear t e c eersr All hockey-league referees have other occupations besides sport. O'Hara, O'Leary, and Laflamme' are doctors; Mallinson is in the I umner business; Bell is a contractor; and Lou Marsh, whom Garden crowds like least of any, writes a column on sport for the Toronto Star. Most of them are be- tween thirty-five and fi fty years old; they are paid fifty to a hundred dollars a game, depending on its importance. There is no official dressing-room for referees in the Garden. Jim McNally, the superintendent, lets them use his office and, sitting round his desk in polished chairs, they smoke and chat during the intermissions. It is cozy in the little office. The superintendent, a tall, elderly Irishman, thumbs over a pile of receipts; behind his head hangs a calendar ornamented wi th a picture of a saint, and on the corner of his desk the puck lies in a little ring of melted ice-sha vings. T HOUGH Manager Gorman of the Americans has recalled Jesse Spring from Pittsburgh as utility de- fence man, the Rangers are beginning the last month of the season wi thout any new players. It is too late now for Lester Patrick to break someone in; he likes to do that early in the season, when there is time for it. Once he told me a story about a fellow he had bought somewhere to fill a gap in his lineup. He went to a lot of trouble to gi ve the new player the coaching he needed and before his first game even made out a list of the opposing team in which each individual's weaknesses and characteristIcs were noted. "And now," said Patrick, concluding his directions, "that's what I want you to do when you get in there." The new player nodded confidently. "I got you, coach. You just want me to play my regular game." Worn by a blackboard lecture that had lasted more than an hour, Patrick glared at him. "I thought he was kidding," he says, telling the story, "but he meant it. 'Sure, go on and play your regular ga111e,' I told him. What could you do? A chap like him gets in the wrong profession when he takes up hockey-he ought to stick to prizefighting." -N.. B., JR. 43 -- - ;;;;;; ---- , ' " ..: V" :::. <? : '. . {. ';;",1í d1 t.:?-......:. . ....;... .;/ .i4{ .. ) lf':" ;'."itt ""r .:.i( : J .. ..=....., }) ,': .;ç: .::::j{: ; '-:==:::" "," j; ; " . '. : ' : ' : . ; ' u . ' : : , ' , : I , ' , t" \:, . """'o"'<ii """"*, . "!"":;.-,...... ::::::.:. .::: .....:... . l r::: :. :., :..: . :: .{-.:t:: :' : . :J;J .$:: 7f:M*<>?v..y ,(:::: -:.: ":':';Ai:;:: ',; ":' _: :.; ::.": ..;...:.- " : ;t :,, ' >>.,. =->>-:..: : ":q I In OneDa!l II9 WOMEN HÅ"VE OlUE TO R.LOUIS from all/Drú of/he world By ANN FRANKLIN For years . Louis has gathered from the wide world, a knowledge of beauty, tested it, and brought it to a superb point of perfection. Today, R. Louis has taken his place with those inspired men who have given their lives to the supreme creation of beauty for women - Paul Poiret and Lucien Lelong. A step from Fifth Avenue, in the world's largest beauty establishment, more than eleven hundred fashionable women in one day have come for treat- ment and advice on the care of the skin and artistry of the hair. It is here that the socially emi- nent, the stars of the stage and screen have found the ultimate in beauty care and treatment. And now-the preparations so carefully developed by R. Louis and the corps of skilled experts trained in his laboratory, are ready to be offered to the world. They are preparations so pure, so effective that they can bear the name of this modern magician, the name that has won the confidence of thousands of fashionable women the world over, R. Louis. Each preparation, made of the finest materials procurable, is encased in a manner not onl,., to grace the boudoir table, but to make it the most delightful to use. Each crême comes in a genuine pottery jar to preserve its exquisite texture and fresh- ness, each lotion in a bottle of clear crystal. To see these new preparations and to use them, is to be instantly captured by their supreme fineness. .01.. .... -.-.". .. :',t :;': y . , \;il ,:: .., At the more distinguished places, ask to see these unsurpassed prepar- ations of R. Louis. Write for Beautistics, a book on the Art of Beauty and the method of R. Louis, and diagnosis questionnaire, gratis. ()IJ Benufisfics 26 WEST 58 TH STREET New York, N. Y. V I:VÂI:2ÁTI()NS () r= Lf)UIS 12. Cleansing Crême Skin Tonic Special Astringent Bleach Crême Crême Rouge Compact Rouge MuscJe Oil Pore Cr me Circulation Ointment Autour des yeux Hand Crême Basic Crême Lip Stick Cleansing Tissue Face Powder Tissue Cr me Liquid Rouge Dusting Powder